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  1. A deadly air pollution disaster in a Pennsylvania town caused by a temperature inversion and emissions from two steel plants. Learn about the incident, its effects, the lawsuits, and the legacy of the Donora Smog Museum.

  2. Oct 27, 2020 · Donora was a Pennsylvania town dependent on metal mills that polluted the air and the Monongahela River. In October 1948, a temperature inversion trapped the contaminants and fog, causing a five-day crisis that killed 20 people and sickened thousands.

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  3. Oct 26, 2018 · In October 1948, a lethal fog killed 20 people and sickened thousands in the Pennsylvania town of Donora, where steel and zinc industries dominated. The incident sparked environmental and public health reforms, but also exposed the conflicts between industry and regulation.

    • Lorraine Boissoneault
  4. At the end of October 1948, the communities of Donora and Webster in Pennsylvania were visited by a smog that changed the face of environmental protection in the United States. Conservative estimates showed that 20 individuals died, while an additional 5900—43% of the population of Donora—were affected by the smog.

    • Elizabeth T. Jacobs, Jefferey L. Burgess, Mark B. Abbott
    • 2018
  5. Nov 29, 2017 · Learn how a 1948 temperature inversion trapped a lethal fog of pollution in a Pennsylvania town, killing dozens and sickening thousands. Explore the conflicting narratives, conspiracy theories, and clean air laws that emerged from this environmental catastrophe.

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  6. Donora, Pennsylvania was a bustling industrial town in 1948, but it became a deadly trap for its residents when a temperature inversion trapped toxic smog from the zinc and steel plants. The disaster sparked the first federal clean air laws and changed the face of environmental protection in the U.S.

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  8. Donora, Pennsylvania, was a steel town that suffered a deadly smog episode in October 1948, when 20 people died and nearly 6,000 were sickened. The tragedy sparked the clean air movement and led to the first national air pollution conference and the Clean Air Act.